Mission: British Science Festival

When you hit a festival you’ve got to plan what you want to see with military rigour, right? Surely it takes all the fun out of it if you aren’t knackered from running between venues all week? In much the same way that I drive my friends crazy when we go to Glastonbury by insisting on colour coding the line-up with bands I’d love to see (green), and wouldn’t mind seeing if we happened not to be currently installed at one of the aforementioned slots (blue), my science festival picks have been booked and timed to the minute!

I’m happy to say that I’ve managed to score tickets for lots of my top picks for the festival this year: Prof. Iain Stewart’s recounting of the geological journey behind his new series ‘Story of the Continents’, Richard Fortey and Co. for their upliftingly titled scientific journey to the end of the world ‘The Real Doomsday 2012: Cataclysmic Events and Human Extinction’ and ‘An Audience with Bill Bryson’ (where I may attempt to make recompense with the Bry’s for my father accosting him for a photo op at my graduation ceremony some years back)

With the festival only a few days away now, expect rants, reviews and exclamations of general excitement to appear at any time!

Back to the first post

Oh blogs you fickle things! I forget about you for a year or two and magically you have disappeared (it’s both fortunate and lamentable that embarassing teenage diaries don’t do that)

Anyway here we are, back at the first post, and I should probably set out why this blog existed in the first place…

  • To give me an outlet for extolling the many (occasionally well-hidden) virtues of working in the Earth Sciences
  • To broadcast some of the awesome things which you can’t help but come across when working at a University
  • For occasional rants about great / terrible / hilarious science

So there we have it. More installments soon (or at least within the next year or two!)